Wide-ranging Ways to Design With Words

These days multiple word cloud options are available for students and teachers, and designing with words is an easy way for learners to create report illustrations or create graphics with spelling or vocabulary lists.

Word design sites offer users a range of opportunities. Some create conversation bubbles, others form shapes and images, and other word cloud sites evaluate short passages taken from reading material. While word designing is not, strictly speaking, an important 21st Century digital world skill, these websites encourage kids to organize information and create in clever and stylistic ways — activities that were not easily accomplished before web 2.0 arrived on the scene.

Many people are familiar with Wordle– the original word cloud site — that is especially clean, easy-to-use, and without advertising. Yet, as with everything else in the digital world word cloud sites are increasing. Sites building off Wordle’s success offer various options for saving, sharing, copying, and embedding, but no one word cloud site offers everything. Most of the sites below allow users to format with colors, fonts, and typeface sizes.

Check Out These Sites

A design made with Tagul.

Tagul.com – You need to sign up to use this, and Tagul keeps track of the words used and images created, but it does not collect or share personal information. The site has no advertising.

ImageChef.com — No sign-up is required, but this site has advertising. ImageChef makes word clouds for all sorts of purposes — banners, cards, posters, etc. It’s a bit like the old-fashioned PrintShop program but with word clouds. These images are easily downloaded.

Festisite — This word cloud maker lets a user turn words or a passage into a maze, spiral, or wavy text — something different compared to the other sites. On my Mac the Festisite graphics opened automatically in Preview — ready for me to save and use. Festisite has some advertising — for me this means Google advertisements that I often see in other places.

Made with Wordfoto

WordItOut — Type in a passage and click the WordItOut button. No sign-up is required at the site, but if you want to send your word cloud via e-mail, WordItOut asks for your address. WordItOut does not use this personal information for any other purpose.

Wordfoto – If you use iPhones or iPads, the Wordfoto app allows a user to choose a photo, link that picture with a list or words, and create stunning word designs.

This Blog’s Mission

This blog’s mission is to help parents, teachers, and other adults learn more about helping digital kids grow into thoughtful, collaborative, and savvy digital citizens. With a range of information-filled posts on digital kids, edtech, digital parenting, medialit, and digital citizenship MediaTechParenting offers adults the opportunity to become familiar with media, the digital world, 21st century learning, and the virtual environment that young people take for granted, thereby serving as models and mentors for the children in their care.